Breaking News Emails

JINDO, South Korea — Parents mourning victims of last year's Sewol ferry disaster cried out their names Wednesday at the spot where the ship went down, threw white chrysanthemums into the sea and made offerings of their loved ones' favorite snacks.

A ship carrying about 200 family members made the hour-long trip to the site of the April 16, 2014, sinking.

"I am so heartbroken. In such cold water, to think how cold she would have been," Lee Jung-seob said of her daughter, Hye-kyung, one of 250 pupils at the Danwon High School in Ansan who died. "As she ended her life, to think how she would have missed her mom and dad and her family. My heart aches so much."

The Sewol set off on April 15 last year from Incheon, west of Seoul, for a routine overnight voyage to the holiday island of Jeju with 476 people on board.

The ferry, later found to have been structurally unsound and overloaded, capsized when it made a sharp turn in the waters off the southwestern island of Jindo. Many of the children followed instructions to stay in their cabins as the crew scrambled to safety.

Breaking News Emails

Get breaking news alerts and special reports. The news and stories that matter, delivered weekday mornings.

Relatives of victims of the Sewol ferry disaster weep on Wednesday as they stand on the deck of a boat during a visit to the site where the vessel sunk.ED JONES / Pool via AFP - Getty Images

The chief engineer was convicted of homicide and jailed for 30 years after South Korea's worst sea disaster in decades. Fourteen surviving crew members, including the captain, were jailed for between five and 36 years for negligence.

Heartrending stories emerged of children tying their life jackets together, of fingernails torn of children trying to climb out of the sinking hull and of pupils joking it felt like the Titanic as the ferry began to list.

More than 300 people died in the disaster, with the bodies of nine still missing.

- Reuters

Breaking News Emails

Get breaking news alerts and special reports. The news and stories that matter, delivered weekday mornings.